• riodoro1@lemmy.world
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    9 months ago

    … what?

    Finder, Safari and Mail icons are iconic symbols created a loong time ago and thankfully apple didn’t butcher them completely when they got modernized. The rest are generic, but very much in a specific Apple style of icon born with the OS X.

      • bisby@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        If you found a person who had never seen any of these. they could accurately guess what most of the icons on the right are for. And they could probably only guess gimp from the left.

        Also, the apple side are app icons, while the FOSS side are a mix of icons/logos/mascots.

        Icons don’t need “personality” as much as they need to be descriptive and useful. And for Apple default apps, they don’t need to be branded with a flashy mascot, because they aren’t trying to win your brand loyalty, you already are using macOS, so they already won.

        • Rooki@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          Yeah thats what soulless is in this case. The monopoly and locking users into only buying things with a bitten off apple.

          Apple probably googled for some just cartoon style and used the first thing.

          • bisby@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            I’d argue it’s literally the opposite of what you’re saying. They are trying to make the product easier to use by making it explicit what the icon is for. If that makes you happy, that’s not locking you in.

            They do plenty of locking in. This is not that.

            I’d much rather tell grandma “the music player is the music notes” … she’ll remember that. and not “the music player is the one with the lightning bolt” because she won’t remember that.

            Even if you don’t like him. I highly doubt Jony Ive designs things by just googling cartoons. Lots of thought went into these icons. I feel like these are from multiple eras of macOS… Theres the “consistent” ones (the circles) and the “skeumorphic” ones (the stamp, the contact book, calendar)

            As far as ICONs go, I vastly prefer the ones on the right. As far as brand mascots go, I prefer the ones on the left.

            We’re not even comparing apples and oranges here. Neither side is soulless, theyre just achieving different objectives and you seem to have a bone to pick with apple.

        • rambaroo@lemmy.world
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          9 months ago

          I really disagree with your first sentence. A few of the icons are obvious, but most are extremely vague. I actually use a Mac every day at work and I can’t tell you what half of these icons are for (I guess I don’t use them). For example the rocket icon, the book (is it a reader or a dictionary or what?), Safari’s icon looks like a map app since it’s a compass.

          I don’t know what the history/clock icon is for and the app store icon is just terrible, and has even fewer context clues in languages where the word “app” doesn’t start with a Latin A character.

          Icons rely on all kinds of assumptions and cultural cues. They might as well be hieroglyphics to people who aren’t familiar with them, which is why they need to come with labels or tooltips.

          • bisby@lemmy.world
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            9 months ago

            safari, and the app store aren’t great.

            I dont have a mac or an iphone, but actually follow tech, so Im at least aware of what apps exist… if I had to guess the rest:

            calendar, contact book, video call, time machine backups (this one probably requires knowing that backups are a thing), some sort of e-reader, music app, launcher (macOS did the thing where they added an iOS type launcher when they started making “fullscreen” its own special thing right?), and given the final one is a stamp so… apple mail?

            So unless I’m wrong, and we say safari, app store, time machine, and the launcher aren’t clear. that’s still 6/10 icons that ARE clear. Even if we take out the reader… 5/10… it’s still mostly recognizable

            Compared to the FOSS side, which gets GIMP. 1/10.

            and I agree there assumptions being made. Things like “App store” needs an A because English is not very inclusive, but I dont think that makes things soulless. If their assumptions were “we’re making luxury items for affluent Americans (who generally speak English)” then they made a fine decision for reaching their target audience. I’d argue that the app store icon has the most “creativity” put into it.